Throngs of women to run in Lebanon’s May 6 election
A record number of women are among nearly 1,000 candidates who have registered to stand in Lebanon’s first legislative elections in nine years.
A total of 976 people announced their candidacies for 128 parliamentary seats before registration for the May 6 poll closed late Tuesday.
They include 111 women, the NNA reported, citing the interior ministry which manages elections.
That marks a sharp increase compared with the previous legislative election in 2009 when just 12 women were among 706 candidates who took part.
Among the female candidates are high-profile journalist Paula Yaacoubian, civil society activist and first-time candidate Nayla Geagea, and lawyer and one-time presidential candidate Nadine Moussa.
Lebanon’s political scene has long been divided between a bloc led by Iran-backed Shiite movement Hezbollah and another Saudi-aligned camp headed by Prime Minister Saad Hariri, a Sunni politician.
Lebanon recognizes 18 official religious sects and its parliamentary seats are divided equally between Muslims and Christians.
The May 6 vote will be the first test of Lebanon’s new proportional electoral law which was agreed on in 2017 after years of wrangling among Lebanon’s various political factions.
It replaces the existing plurality voting system with proportional representation and reduces the number of electoral districts to 15.
In each district, seats are distributed among the different religious communities.